Jewish and Israeli Holidays
Border crossing posts will work 24/7 ahead of Rosh Hashanah.
The prayer notes are removed from the wall twice a year—before Passover and the High Holidays—and are buried in a Jewish cemetery.
“We have big freezers and have been working since after Passover to prepare the items,” said Yehoshua Vishedski at Vaad HaKashrut of Ukraine.
Hundreds of the neediest Jews across the former Soviet Union will also receive such packages for the holidays, starting before Rosh Hashanah.
U.S. Chargé d’Affaires Stephanie Hallett invited “many” other Israeli officials to the event, according to Israeli media reports.
“It set a very good foundation for me to start out the year,” said attorney Sara Shulevitz-Vorhandin, who attended the Rosh Hashanah program in Miami Beach in 2017.
A congressman, rabbis and Jewish nonprofit heads also shared some of their personal resolutions for the coming year.
And a cantor at a New York Reform congregation will perform “L’dor V’dor,” corresponding to the rabbi’s talk about intergenerational friendship.
A new bill aims to change the 2024 primary from April 23, the first day of the Jewish holiday, to March 19.
A Sephardic seder or vegan entrees go a long way in meeting the culinary needs of guests gathered around the holiday table.
The conservative group, which has been accused of being antisemitic by progressives, proves otherwise with its actions, Bethany Mandel told JNS.
Prepping the site before thousands of visitors arrive to herald in the Jewish New Year.